Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Official: Aim to keep artifacts at battlefiel­d

- LYNN KUTTER

PRAIRIE GROVE — A mold problem has been remediated, and plans are moving forward to keep artifacts at Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park at a collection management facility on site.

Stacy Hurst, secretary of the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism, on Thursday returned to the state park for the second time this year to give an update on steps to preserve the artifacts and make improvemen­ts to the building used to store the items.

Hurst addressed about 65 people in the Latta Barn on June 16. Many attended out of concern about a decision to move the artifacts to a collection­s management facility at Jacksonpor­t State Park in Newport. She acknowledg­ed the state probably didn’t do its due diligence before deciding to move the artifacts.

She told the packed room in June she valued the passion and ownership Prairie Grove residents have for the state park. The goal would be to have the artifacts remain “in perpetuity” in Prairie Grove, she said.

On Thursday the crowd was considerab­ly smaller for Hurst’s update. Along with Hurst, others who spoke were Jimmy Bryant, director of the Division of Arkansas Heritage; Bill Gatewood, director of the Old State House Museum; and Shea Lewis, deputy director of Arkansas State Parks.

Hurst said the reorganiza­tion of state government that placed Arkansas Heritage and the state parks system under one umbrella allowed her to tap into expertise in both department­s on how to make the building suitable for storing the battlefiel­d artifacts.

At her request, Bryant and Gatewood evaluated the park’s collection management facility during a June 29 visit. Their three-page report showed a mold problem, primarily in a room formerly used as the kitchen area. The structure originally was built to be used as a residence.

Their conclusion was that if the mold was successful­ly remediated and the park completed other recommenda­tions in the report, the building could “fulfill its role as a museum collection­s management facility.”

Gatewood on Thursday said the other recommenda­tions were to cover any openings to the outside, add insulation to the attic, patch holes in the walls and ceilings and figure out the best way to deal with mold in some of the leather artifacts.

Lewis updated those at the meeting on steps taken so far.

The artifacts were removed from the facility and placed in a condition-controlled storage pod parked behind the building. Samantha Bynum, a curator with the Arkansas Museum of Natural Resources in Smackover, has served as the “boots on the ground” person handling the artifacts, Lewis said.

The state contracted with Arkansas Power Dry of Bradford to remediate the mold for $25,000. This work is finished, and the mold has been removed from the kitchen area and the room treated, Lewis said.

“It’s a noticeable difference,” he added.

The next step will be to make the repairs recommende­d in the report.

When the repairs are finished, Bynum will oversee the process to clean and evaluate the artifacts to prepare them to be returned to the collection­s management facility.

Bynum and her team, along with park Superinten­dent Susan Donnangelo, will review the artifacts as part of the cleaning process to make sure each supports the mission of Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park.

“It shouldn’t take a long time for the collection to be in its permanent resting place here in Prairie Grove,” Lewis said.

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